Saturday 24 May

Saturday 24 May

Saturday of the 5th week of Eastertide
First reading Acts 16:1-10
The Spirit who guided Paul across unfamiliar lands, closing some doors and opening others, continues to be the living compass of the Church today. In the Acts of the Apostles, we see not just a missionary strategy but a divine choreography, where the Holy Spirit orchestrates each movement with wisdom and purpose. Easter reminds us that the Risen Christ has not left us orphaned—His Spirit lives in the Church, animating her mission, shaping her journey, and whispering truth into the hearts of the faithful. As we walk the path of faith, may we learn to trust the quiet, persistent voice of the Spirit who still leads, still sends, and still builds the Body of Christ in the world. Let’s reflect: Easter is the celebration of the Risen Christ who, through the guidance of His Spirit, continues to lead and animate the Church in her mission across the world.

Don Giorgio

Friday 23 May

Friday 23 May

Friday of the 5th week of Eastertide
First reading Acts 15:22-31
The Easter mystery calls us back to the heart of the Gospel: that in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God has shattered the weight of sin and opened to us the path of new life. In this light, the reading from Acts 15 offers a profound reflection on the nature of Christian freedom and the discernment of essentials. As the early Church faced cultural differences and pastoral tensions, it did not respond with rigidity or excessive demands, but with a Spirit-led wisdom: “It has been decided by the Holy Spirit and by us not to burden you beyond these essentials.” This decision reveals a vital truth of Easter faith—that the Gospel is not a system of burdensome laws, but a proclamation of grace, mercy, and joyful obedience. Easter reminds us that what truly matters is not an accumulation of rules, but the inner transformation that comes from a living relationship with the Risen Lord. The essentials are few: to love God, to love one another, to turn away from idols, and to remain pure in heart. When we cling to what is essential, we allow the Holy Spirit to guide us with peace and clarity, lifting the weight of unnecessary burdens and drawing us ever more deeply into the joy and simplicity of the Resurrection. In a world often caught in overcomplication and anxiety, the Easter message invites us to rediscover the liberating power of Christ’s love, which alone makes all things new. Let’s reflect: Easter is the joyful celebration of the liberating power of Christ’s Resurrection, which frees us from unnecessary burdens and calls us to live by the essential truths of faith, guided by the Holy Spirit.

Don Giorgio

Thursday 22 May

Thursday 22 May

Thursday of the 5th week of
Saint Rita of Cascia
First reading Acts 15:7-21
Easter reminds us that salvation is not a reward for merit but a gift of grace freely given through Jesus Christ. As we hear in Acts, “God made no distinction between them and us,” for all are purified by faith and saved by grace alone. This truth lies at the heart of the Resurrection: the boundless mercy of God poured out for all humanity, beyond any boundary of race, law, or custom. When we forget this, we burden others with expectations and barriers the Gospel never intended. Easter invites us to rediscover the joy of grace—unearned, liberating, and inclusive—and to become, in turn, bearers of that same grace in our communities. Let’s reflect: Easter is the celebration of God’s universal grace, which purifies every heart through faith and saves all people through the mercy of Jesus Christ.

Don Giorgio

Wednesday 21 May

Wednesday 21 May

Wednesday of the 5th week of Eastertide
or Saint Christopher Magallanes and his Companions, Martyrs
First reading Acts 15:1-6
The Easter season invites us to celebrate not only the Resurrection of Christ but also the newness of life that flows from His victory over division and death. In the reading from Acts, we see how rigid insistence on old customs, though well-intentioned, threatens to fracture the unity of the early Church. True Easter faith calls us to be instruments of the Holy Spirit, not by clinging to burdensome demands, but by embracing the liberating grace of the Risen Christ. The Spirit does not bind but sets free; it does not divide but gathers into one. As we walk in the light of Easter, may we resist the temptation to impose, and instead, discern with humility how best to build communion, allowing love and mercy, not law alone, to be our guiding light. Let’s reflect: Easter is the celebration of the liberating power of the Risen Christ, who calls us beyond the constraints of law and division into the unifying freedom and grace of the Holy Spirit.

Don Giorgio

Tuesday 20 May

Tuesday 20 May

Tuesday of the 5th week of Eastertide
Saint Bernardine of Siena, Priest
First reading Acts 14:19-28
Easter is not only the triumphant proclamation that Christ is risen—it is also the quiet, daily miracle of rising again in the midst of suffering, rejection, and weakness. In the Acts of the Apostles, we witness a powerful image of this Paschal mystery made visible in the life of Saint Paul. After being stoned and dragged out of the city, presumed dead, it is the disciples who gather around him—not with lament, but with the silent strength of communion. Their very presence becomes a channel of grace, and Paul, embodying the resilience of the Risen Christ, stands up and walks back into the very place of violence. This moment is a vivid portrait of what Easter truly means for the Church: it is the victory of love that refuses to abandon, the courage to return where wounds were made, and the power of community to raise up those who have fallen. In our own lives, when we are bruised by disappointment, failure, or betrayal, the Easter mystery invites us not to retreat, but to rise again—with the help of others, with the strength of faith, and with hearts set on the Kingdom. For every time we choose to stand again and walk forward, Easter lives on. Let’s reflect: Easter is the mystery of rising again through the strength of communion, where the love of Christ and the support of the faithful transform every fall into a new beginning.

Don Diorgio